
Thrilled to live in a city and state small enough where people can get to know their governor personally, Juneau residents and visitors lined up Tuesday for the annual governor's open house.
Juneau's Paul Spangler greeted the governor, then stepped around a corner and whipped out his cell phone.
"Guess who I just saw - Sarah Palin," he said breathlessly.
"I'm calling you from inside the Governor's Mansion - right now," Spangler continued.
I've heard and read that the renovations to the executive mansion involved important repairs and replacements to plumbing and electrical systems that may or may not have been long overdue. Palin's "truth squad" has used these renovations as a "reason" for her having been in Juneau so little since the legislative sessions ended.
I've also heard from Juneau sources that some of the renovations performed have not been at all necessary, and were rather costly. I can't help but be reminded of the times she redecorated or refurbished her Wasilla mayor's office suite while she signed on to her police department's deletion of payment for sexual assault forensic examinations, which then required state-level legislation to rectify.
This governor, who claimed in 2004 through 2006, that high-level state officials should publicly share the results of State Personnel Board findings, now refuses to do so herself. Time to move on?
This governor, who criticized her predecessor for high travel expenses, has managed to bilk Alaskans out of scores of thousands of dollars for such things as flying herself and daughter Bristol to New York City, for Palin to participate in a four-hour event, but then staying at a pricey hotel in New York City for an entire work week, at Alaska's expense. And so on. Time to move on?
This governor, who has been lying through her teeth for over a decade about being an expense cutter, seems to be spending as much time and effort changing the record on the reasons for her own personal expenses, as on figuring out ways to tidy up and pare our Alaska budget. Time to move on?
This governor, who is proposing a FY 2010 budget based on unrealistically optimistic oil pricing, whose AGIA deal with a company that will not be able to obtain either financing or gas, and whose obligations to locked-in budget expenses are going to be overwhelming, appears to be blithely walking into a shitstorm that will be at least as bad to Alaskans as was the mini-depression here from late 1985 through 1988. Time to move on?
The cold reality is that our upcoming legislature, Republicans and Democrats, need to assert far greater influence over the budget and spending processes in Alaska than they have over the past decade. My hopes for this aren't exactly brimming with optimism.
It is time to move on, though, from expecting any sort of creative, incisive thinking from the Palin administration.